“No go, Duomart!” he informed the girl ten minutes later, his voice heavy with disappointment. “It’s an ungodly twisted mess down here . . . worse than I thought it might be! Looks as if we’ll have to cut all the way through to that vault. Give Egavine the signal to start herding the boys down.”
Approximately an hour afterwards, Miss Mines reported urgently through the communicator, “They’ll reach the lock in less than four minutes now, Dasinger! Better drop it and come up!”
“I’m on my way.” Dasinger reluctantly switched off the beam-saw he was working with, fastened it to the belt of the salvage suit, turned in the murky water and started back towards the upper sections of the wreck. The job of getting through the tangled jungle of metal and plastic to the gem vault appeared no more than half completed, and the prospect of being delayed over it until the Spy discovered them here began to look like a disagreeably definite possibility. He clambered and floated hurriedly up through the almost vertical passage he’d cleared, found daylight flooding the lock compartment, the system’s yellow sun well above the horizon. Peeling off the salvage suit, he restored the communicator to his wrist and went over to the head of the ramp.
THE five men came filing down the last slopes in the morning light, Taunus and Calat in the lead, Graylock behind them, the winged animal riding his shoulder and lifting occasionally into the air to flutter about the group. Quist and Egavine brought up the rear. Dasinger took the gun from his pocket.
“I’ll clip my gun to the suit belt when I go back down in the water with the boys,” he told the communicator. “If the doctor’s turning any tricks over in his mind, that should give him food for thought. I’ll relieve Quist of his weapon as he comes in.”
“What about the guns in Graylock’s hut?” Duomart asked.
“No charge left in them. If I’m reasonably careful, I really don’t see what Dr. Egavine can do. He knows he loses his half-interest in the salvage the moment he pulls any illegal stunts.”
A minute or two later, he called out, “Hold it there, doctor?”
The group shuffled to a stop near the foot of the ramp, staring up at him.
“Yes, Dasinger?” Dr. Egavine called back, sounding a trifle winded.
“Have Quist come up first and alone, please.” Dasinger disarmed the little man at the entrance to the lock, motioned him on to the center of the compartment. The others arrived then in a line, filed past Dasinger and joined Quist.
“You’ve explained the situation to everybody?” Dasinger asked Egavine. There was an air of tenseness about the little group he didn’t like, though tension might be understandable enough under the circumstances.
“Yes,” Dr. Egavine said. “They feel entirely willing to assist us, of course.” He smiled significantly.
“Fine.” Dasinger nodded. “Line them up and let’s get going! Taunus first. Get . . .”
There was a momentary stirring of the air back of his head. He turned sharply, jerking up the gun, felt twin needles drive into either side of his neck.
His body instantly went insensate. The lock appeared to circle about him, then he was on his back and Graylock’s pet was alighting with a flutter of wings on his chest. It craned its head forward to peer into his face, the tip of its mouth tube open, showing a ring of tiny teeth. Vision and awareness left Dasinger together.
The other men hadn’t moved. Now Dr. Egavine, his face a little pale, came over to Dasinger, the birdlike creature bounding back to the edge of the lock as he approached. Egavine knelt down, said quietly, his mouth near the wrist communicator, “Duomart Mines, you will obey me.”
There was silence for a second or two. Then the communicator whispered, “Yes.”
Dr. Egavine drew in a long, slow breath.
“You feel no question, no concern, no doubt about this situation,” he went on. “You will bring the ship down now and land it safely beside the Antares. Then come up into the lock of the Antares for further instructions.” Egavine stood up, his eyes bright with triumph.
IN the Mooncat three miles overhead, Duomart switched off her wrist communicator, sat white-faced, staring at the image of the Antares in the ground-view plate.
“Sweet Jana!” she whispered. “How did he . . . now what do I . . .”
She hesitated an instant, then opened a console drawer, took out the kwil needle Dasinger had left with her and slipped it into a pocket, clipped the holstered shocker back to her belt, and reached for the controls. A vast whistling shriek smote the Antares and the ears of those within as the Mooncat ripped down through atmosphere at an unatmospheric speed, leveled out smoothly and floated to the ground beside the wreck.
There was no one in sight in the lock of the Antares as Duomart came out and sealed the Mooncat’s entry behind her. She went quickly up the broad, mold-covered ramp. The lock remained empty. From beyond it came the sound of some metallic object being pulled about, a murmur of voices. Twelve steps from the top, she took out the little gun, ran up to the lock and into it, bringing the gun up. She had a glimpse of Dr. Egavine and Quist standing near a rusty bench in the compartment, of Graylock half into a salvage suit, Dasinger on the floor . . . then a flick of motion to right and left.
The tips of two space lines lashed about her simultaneously, one pinning her arms to her sides, the other clamping about her ankles and twitching her legs out from beneath her. She fired twice blindly to the left as the lines snapped her face down to the floor of the compartment. The gun was clamped beneath her stretched-out body and useless.
“WHAT made that animal attack me anyway?” Dasinger asked wearily. He had just regained consciousness and been ordered by Calat to join the others on a rusted metal bench in the center of the lock compartment; Duomart to his left, Egavine on his right, Quist on the other side of Egavine. Calat stood watching them fifteen feet away, holding Dasinger’s gun in one hand while he jiggled a few of Hovig’s star hyacinths gently about in the other.
Calat’s expression was cheerful, which made him the exception here. Liu Taunus and Graylock were down in the hold of the ship, working sturdily with cutter beams and power hoists to get to the sealed vault and blow it open. How long they’d been at it, Dasinger didn’t know.
“You can thank your double-crossing partner for what happened!” Duomart informed him. She looked pretty thoroughly mussed up though still unsubdued. “Graylock’s been using the bird-thing to hunt with,” she said. “It’s a bloodsucker . . . nicks some animal with its claws and the animal stays knocked out while the little beast fills its tummy. So the intellectual over there had Graylock point you out to his pet, and it waited until your back was turned . . .” She hesitated, went on less vehemently, “Sorry about not carrying out orders, Dasinger. I assumed Egavine really was in control here, and I could have handled him. I walked into a trap.” She fished the shards of a smashed kwil needle out of her pocket, looked at them, and dropped them on the floor before her. “I got slammed around a little,” she explained.
Calat laughed, said something in the Fleet tongue, grinning at her. She ignored him.
Egavine said, “My effects were secretly inspected while we were at the Fleet station, Dasinger, and the Fleetmen have been taking drugs to immunize themselves against my hypnotic agents. They disclosed this when Miss Mines brought the speedboat down. There was nothing I could do. I regret to say that they intend to murder us. They are waiting only to assure themselves that the star hyacinths actually are in the indicated compartment.”
“Great!” Dasinger groaned. He put his hands back in a groping gesture to support himself on the bench.
“Still pretty feeble, I suppose?” Miss Mines inquired, gentle sympathy in her voice.
“I’m poisoned,” he muttered brokenly. “The thing’s left me paralyzed . . .” He sagged sideways a little, his hand moving behind Duomart. He pinched her then in a markedly unparalyzed and vigorous manner.
Duomart’s right eyelid flickered for an instant.
“SOMEBODY wrung the litt
le monster’s neck before I got here,” she remarked. “But there’re other necks I’d sooner wring! Your partner’s, for instance. Not that he’s necessarily the biggest louse around at the moment.” She nodded at Calat. “The two runches who call themselves Fleetmen don’t intend to share the star hyacinths even with their own gang! They’re rushing the job through so they can be on their way to the Hub before the Spy arrives. And don’t think Liu Taunus trusts that muscle-bound foogal standing there, either! He’s hanging on to the key of the Mooncat’s console until he comes back up.”
Calat smiled with a suggestion of strain, then said something in a flat, expressionless voice, staring at her.
“Oh, sure,” she returned. “With Taunus holding me, I suppose?” She looked at Dasinger. “They’re not shooting me right off, you know,” she told him. “They’re annoyed with me, so they’re taking me along for something a little more special. But they’ll have to skip the fun if the Spy shows up, or I’ll be telling twenty armed Fleetmen exactly what kind of thieving cheats they have leading them!” She looked back at Calat, smiled, placed the tip of her tongue lightly between her lips for an instant, then pronounced a few dozen Fleet words in a clear, precise voice.
It must have been an extraordinarily unflattering comment. Calat went white, then red. Half-smart tough had been Duomart’s earlier description of him. It began to look like an accurate one . . . Dasinger felt a surge of pleased anticipation. His legs already were drawn well back beneath the bench; he shifted his weight slowly forwards now, keeping an expression of anxious concern on his face. Calat spoke in Fleetlingue again, voice thickening with rage.
Miss Mines replied sweetly, stood up. The challenge direct.
The Fleetman’s face worked in incredulous fury. He shifted the gun to his left hand and came striding purposefully towards Miss Mines, right fist cocked. Then, as Dasinger tensed his legs happily, a muffled thump from deep within the wreck announced the opening of the star hyacinth vault.
The sound was followed by instant proof that Hovig had trapped the vault.
Duomart and Calat screamed together. Dasinger drove himself forward off the bench, aiming for the Fleetman’s legs, checked and turned for the gun which Calat, staggering and shrieking, his face distorted with lunatic terror, had flung aside. Dr. Egavine, alert for this contingency, already was stooping for the gun, hand outstretched, when Dasinger lunged against him, bowling him over.
DASINGER came up with the gun, Quist pounding at his shoulders, flung the little man aside, turned back in a frenzy of urgency. Duomart twisted about on the floor near the far end of the compartment, arms covering her face. The noises that bubbled out from behind her arms set Dasinger’s teeth on edge. She rolled over convulsively twice, stopped dangerously close to the edge of the jagged break in the deck, was turning again as Dasinger dropped beside her and caught her.
Immediately there was a heavy, painful blow on his shoulder. He glanced up, saw Quist running toward him, a rusted chunk of metal like the one he had thrown in his raised hand, and Egavine peering at both of them from the other side of the compartment. Dasinger flung a leg across Duomart, pinning her down, pulled out the gun, fired without aiming. Quist reversed his direction almost in mid-stride. Dasinger fired again, saw Egavine dart towards the lock, hesitate there an instant, then disappear down the ramp, Quist sprinting out frantically after him.
A moment later he drove one of the remaining kwil needles through the cloth of Duomart’s uniform, and rammed the plunger down.
The drug hit hard and promptly. Between one instant and the next, the plunging and screaming ended; she drew in a long, shuddering breath, went limp, her eyes closing slowly. Dasinger was lifting her from the floor when the complete silence in the compartment caught his attention. He looked around. Calat was not in sight. And only then did he become aware of a familiar sensation . . . a Hovig generator’s pulsing, savage storm of seeming nothingness, nullified by the drug in his blood.
He laid the unconscious girl on the bench, went on to the lock.
Dr. Egavine and Quist had vanished; the thick shrubbery along the lake bank stirred uneasily at twenty different points but he wasn’t looking for the pair. With the Mooncat inaccessible to them, there was only one place they could go. Calat’s body lay doubled up in the rocks below the ramp, almost sixty feet down, where other human bodies had lain six years earlier. Dasinger glanced over at the Fleet scout, went back into the compartment.
He was buckling himself into the third salvage suit when he heard the scout’s lifeboat take off. At a guess Hovig’s little private collection of star hyacinths was taking off with it. Dasinger decided he couldn’t care less.
He snapped on the headpiece, then hesitated at the edge of the deck, looking down. A bubble of foggy white light was rising slowly through the water of the hold, and in a moment the headpiece of one of the other suits broke the oily surface, stayed there, bobbing gently about. Dasinger climbed down, brought Liu Taunus’s body back up to the lock compartment, and recovered the Mooncat’s master key.
He found Graylock floating in his suit against a bulkhead not far from the shattered vault where Hovig’s two remaining generators thundered. Dasinger silenced the machines, fastened them and a small steel case containing nearly a hundred million credits’ worth of star hyacinths to the salvage carrier, and towed it all up to the lock compartment.
A very few minutes later, the Mooncat lifted in somewhat jerky, erratic fashion from the planet’s surface. As Dasinger had suspected, he lacked, and by a good deal, Miss Mines’s trained sensitivity with the speedboat’s controls; but he succeeded in wrestling the little ship up to a five-mile altitude where a subspace dive might be carried out in relative safety.
He was attempting then to get the Mooncat’s nose turned away from the distant volcano ranges towards which she seemed determined to point when the detector needles slapped flat against their pins and the alarm bell sounded. A strange ship stood outlined in the Mooncat’s stern screen.
THE image vanished as Dasinger hit the dive button, simultaneously flattening the speed controls with a slam of his hand. The semisolid subspace turbulence representing the mountain ranges beyond the lake flashed instantly past below him . . . within yards, it seemed. Another second put them beyond the planet’s atmosphere. Then the Spy reappeared in subspace, following hard. A hammering series of explosions showed suddenly in the screens, kept up for a few hair-raising moments, began to drop back. Five minutes later, with the distance between them widening rapidly, the Spy gave up the chase, swung around and headed back towards the planet.
Dasinger shakily reduced his ship’s speed to relatively sane level, kept her moving along another twenty minutes, then surfaced into normspace and set a general course for the Hub. He was a very fair yachtsman for a planeteer. But after riding the Mooncat for the short time he’d turned her loose to keep ahead of the Spy through the G2’s stress zone, he didn’t have to be told that in Fleet territory he was outclassed. He mopped his forehead, climbed gratefully out of the pilot seat and went to the cot he had hauled into the control room, to check on Duomart Mines.
She was still unconscious, of course; the dose he’d given her was enough to knock a kwil-sensitive out for at least a dozen hours. Dasinger looked down at the filth-smudged, pale face, the bruised cheeks and blackened left eye for a few seconds, then opened Dr. Egavine’s medical kit to do what he could about getting Miss Mines patched up again.
Fifteen hours later she was still asleep, though to all outer appearances back in good repair. Dasinger happened to be bemusedly studying her face once more when she opened her eyes and gazed up at him.
“We made it! You . . .” She smiled, tried to sit up, looked startled, then indignant. “What’s the idea of tying me down to this thing?”
Dasinger nodded. “I guess you’re all there!” He reached down to unfasten her from the cot. “After what happened, I wasn’t so sure you’d be entirely rational when the kwil wore off and you woke up.”<
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Duomart paled a little. “I hadn’t imagined . . .” She shook her blond head. “Well, let’s skip that! I’ll have nightmares for years . . . What happened to the others?”
DASINGER told her, concluded, “Egavine may have run into the Spy, but I doubt it. He’ll probably show up in the Hub eventually with the gems he took from Calat, and if he doesn’t get caught peddling them he may wind up with around a million credits . . . about the sixth part of what he would have collected if he’d stopped playing crooked and trying to get everything. I doubt the doctor will ever quit kicking himself for that!”
“Your agency gets the whole salvage fee now, eh?”
“Not exactly,” Dasinger said. “Considering everything that’s happened, the Kyth Interstellar Detective Agency would have to be extremely ungrateful if it didn’t feel you’d earned the same split we were going to give Dr. Egavine.”
Miss Mines gazed at him in startled silence, flushed excitedly. “Think you can talk the Kyth people into that, Dasinger?”
“I imagine so,” Dasinger said, “since I own the agency. That should finance your Willata Fleet operation very comfortably and still leave a couple of million credits over for your old age. I doubt we’ll clear anything on Hovig’s generators . . .”
Miss Mines looked uncomfortable. “Do you have those things aboard?”
“At the moment. Disassembled of course. Primarily I didn’t want the Fleet gang to get their hands on them. We might lose them in space somewhere or take them back to the Federation for the scientists to poke over. We’ll discuss that on the way. Now, do you feel perky enough to want a look at the stuff that’s cost around a hundred and fifty lives before it ever hit the Hub’s markets?”
“Couldn’t feel perkier!” She straightened up expectantly. “Let’s see them . . .”
Complete Short Fiction (Jerry eBooks) Page 95